Aug. 19, 2014

NDSU study examines online, face-to-face courses

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A new study by NDSU communication faculty gives an interesting look at students’ perceptions of online versus face-to-face courses. 

The findings of the study by Carrie Anne Platt, associate professor of communication; Nan Yu, assistant professor of communication; and Amber Raile, assistant professor of business at Montana State University, were reported in the article, “Student perceptions of the equivalence of online classes to face-to-face classes,” in the Journal of Online Learning and Teaching.

According to Platt, some might assume students take online classes because they see them as easier than face-to-face classes. However, there’s not much hard research on students’ general perception of the different teaching methods.

Platt and her colleagues conducted an online survey of 289 NDSU students, and found most students’ perceptions are opposite of the conventional wisdom.

“The study reveals students actually see online classes as more challenging,” Platt said. “Part of that is the students have to do more to manage their own time and schedule because online courses do not meet at a set point each week and some self-paced courses don’t have regular deadlines.”

Students also perceived online classes as having less interaction than face-to-face classes, which Platt said could make the course more challenging for students who rely on extra help from their instructor or their peers.

“The main reason the students took online courses was the flexibility of scheduling,” Platt said, noting online courses don’t conflict with scheduled courses in the classroom. “Online courses also can fit in if a student has a part-time job.”

In the survey, students were asked to share their perceptions of online courses and face-to-face courses in terms of challenge, knowledge gained, flexibility and level of interaction with the instructor and other students.

Platt, who joined the NDSU faculty in 2008, earned her bachelor’s degree a from Carroll College in Helena, Montana; her master’s degree from Wake Forest University; and her doctorate from the University of Southern California.

NDSU is recognized as one of the nation's top 108 public and private universities by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education.

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